March 29, 2024
Watch Review: Cartier Mysterious Hour

When first revealed that the current 2015 edition Salon International Haute Horlogerie (the SIHH), dried CLE Cartier watches has been well received by the media and collectors, celebrated its pure, playful and simple design, mainly because, in setting pure Cartier traditional vein. Curved contour, crown and clever fusion of modern interpretation is a key element of success. This watch, which is applicable only in a simple (internal) movement at the time, now to an interesting mystery motor complications. Here is the CLE Cartier mysterious time.

Cartier Mysterious Hour gold watch

Using the same oval and curved case (with a great comfort on the wrist) and the same key-style crown (Clé in French), Cartier adds to its latest addition a more complicated, yet quite intriguing movement and dial, where the hands seem to float over the dial – with no mechanical link with the rest of the movement – something we already showed you here, with the Rotonde de Cartier Mysterious Hour (and some other watches with this same kind of complication). In the flesh, this display is quite magical and once on the wrist, it’s actually really intriguing to see the hands rotating without any (visible) gears or pinions. However, no magic or witchcraft here but pure mechanical inventiveness.

Turning back the Clé de Cartier Mysterious Hour and you’ll discover that achieving such a display requires several mechanical tricks, including a specific layout for the movement where all is miniaturized and placed on one side, from the barrel, the gear train, the escapement and the regulating organ. The Calibre 9981 MC that powers the Clé de Cartier Mysterious Hour (and its Rotonde sibling) is not small at 31.9mm, but do consider that almost half of it is dedicated to the transparent dial. And it’s not thick either, at 4.61mm… Now you could expect the power reserve to be extremely short, due to a small barrel. No chance, as you’ll get 48 hours of energy (quite the average for a rather slim watch). Furthermore, the movement isn’t slow (something that could explain the longer power reserve…), as it ticks at 28.800 bph. Based on specs, it’s quite an impressive movement, considering the very tiny space allowed for the mechanical parts.

Back on the display itself. So what’s the trick? In fact, to create this visual effect where time seems to be displayed with the help of divine forces, the hands are placed on transparent geared discs of sapphire and are driven in the margins of the case. Instead of moving the central pinion that is linked to the hands, the gear-train drives directly the periphery of these two sapphire discs on which the hands are placed. Not that complicated but clever!
Clé de Cartier Mysterious Hour caseback calibre

The rest of the watch is faithful to the normal Clé de Cartier and to the rest of the Cartier collection. The case grows a bit at 41mm (instead of 40mm) to “absorb” the new movement but keeps the exact same design. The dial is a partially skeletonized and brushed plate, with the typically Cartier blue Roman numerals and holes that gives a partial view on the main plate of the movement. Of course, the key-style crown, emblematic of the collection, and its cabochon sapphire, are present. The Clé de Cartier Mysterious Hour is available in 18k rose gold (priced at 62,000 Euros) or in solid palladium (priced at 66,500 Euros)